NORA UTZ and EDNA NIEWIG, Minors by their Guardian Ad Litem, BEN L. EMMONS, Appellant, v. ALVENA DORMANN, VIRGIN DORMANN, ANNA SPETH, FRED SPETH, ARNOLD C. HOEFNER, FRED HOEFNER, HENRY HOEFNER, BENJAMIN HOEFNER, VICTOR HOEFNER, EDWIN HOEFNER, ANNA KARRENBROCK, MATILDA PIERCE, LAURA TURNER, EDNA HOEFNER, IRVING KARRENBROCK, HOMER KARRENBROCK, HERBERT KARRENBROCK, WEBSTER KARRENBROCK, WALDO KARRENBROCK and VIOLA KARRENBROCK, Respondents, and EVELYN DALTON and JUDITH PUNDMANN, Appellants.
Court en Banc
June 30, 1931
39 S.W. (2d) 1053
W. F. Bloebaum, Theodore C. Bruere and Allen, Moser & Marsalek for respondents.
The facts develop that in 1879 Frederick Bredenwischer owned 68.75 acres, and his wife, Elise Bredenwischer, owned 11.25 acres, which two tracts were contiguous and together comprised the west half of the southeast quarter of Section 22, Township 46 North, Range 1 East, in St. Charles County, a tract of eighty acres. On March 21, 1879, Frederick and Elise Bredenwischer executed a deed of trust on said eighty acres to one Leimbrock, trustee, to secure a promissory note of even date in the sum of $1960, payable to Henry Hoefner, which note was signed only by said Frederick. Said deed of trust was duly acknowledged and recorded. Frederick Bredenwischer died in 1885, and letters of administration were issued to Elise, his wife, on July 14, 1885, who inventoried the eighty-acre tract of land as belonging to him, together with $302.45 personalty.
Frederick left surviving him his widow and five daughters, to-wit, Alvena, who married one Dormann; Anna, who married Fred Speth; Judith, who married one Pundmann; Clara, who married one Niewig, and Lena, who died at the age of eight years, intestate, unmarried and without issue, leaving as her heirs at law her mother and four surviving sisters mentioned above. Clara Niewig died intestate later, leaving as her heirs at law her two children, Nora Utz and Edna Niewig, grandchildren of Frederick and Elise Bredenwischer, and plaintiffs herein. Elise Bredenwischer died intestate in 1922, leaving as her only heirs her daughters, Alvena Dormann, Anna Speth, Judith Pundmann, and plaintiffs. Elise, at the death of her husband, took a homestead and dower in his real estate. Subsequently she inherited an interest from her deceased daughter Lena. She continued to live on the farm until her death.
On April 30, 1923, Henry Hoefner, the cestui que trust in the deed of trust and the owner of the $1960 note secured by it, filed his petition, verified April 17, 1923, in the Circuit Court of St. Charles County for the appointment of a trustee in place of Leimbrock, trustee therein, deceased. On May 14, 1923, the circuit court appointed Arnold Hoefner as substitute trustee. The substituted trustee commenced publication of notice of sale under said deed of trust on June 22, 1923, and continued publishing said notice until
On May 16, 1895, Elise Bredenwischer executed a deed of trust and note for $700, payable one year after date, in favor of Fred Speth, on the 11.25 acres, which land was also covered by the deed of trust in favor of Henry Hoefner and to which it was subject.
There was evidence introduced which respondents assert shows that payments on said notes for $1960 and $700, respectively, were made that kept them alive and arrested the Statute of Limitation. Appellants contend that the evidence as to payments was insufficient for that purpose. Our views as to the applicability of
“Sec. 1320. No suit, action or proceeding under power of sale to foreclose any mortgage or deed of trust, to secure any obligation to pay money or property, shall be had or maintained after such obligation has been barred by the statutes of limitation of this state; nor in any event after the lapse of twenty years from the date at which the last maturing obligation secured by the instrument sought to be foreclosed is due on the face of such instrument, unless such termination of said period falls within two years after the passage of this act, or has heretofore happened, in which event such suit, action or proceeding may be begun within two years after the passage of this act without regard to the date of the instrument or the maturity of the obligation, unless otherwise barred under the provisions of the general statutes of limitation, unless before the lapse of said twenty years the owner of the debt thereby secured or some person for him shall file an affidavit duly verified, or file an instrument in writing acknowledged as deeds are required to be acknowledged in order to entitle them to record in this state, showing the amount due and owing thereon.”
I. The deed of trust, executed by Frederick and Elise Bredenwischer, and the note secured by it to Henry Hoefner, cestui que trust and payee, were dated March 21, 1879, due one year after date. The deed of trust, executed by Elise Bredenwischer, and the note secured by it to Fred Speth, cestui que trust and payee, were dated May 16, 1895, due one year after date. The deed of trust to Henry Hoefner was foreclosed by the substituted trustee at his instance, on July 28, 1923,
II. Respondents say, however, that the right to foreclose the deed of trust of March 21, 1879, was not barred by
III. Moreover, it does not appear that the owner of the note and deed of trust, after the circuit court appointed a substitute trustee, proceeded in an orderly and continuous manner to foreclose the deed of trust. The record shows that the substitute trustee was appointed on May 14, 1923, but that he did not begin publication until June 22, 1923. The publisher‘s affidavit shows that the Wentzville Union was a weekly newspaper printed and published in St. Charles County, and that the notice of the foreclosure of said deed of trust was published once a week for six consecutive weeks, to-wit: on June 22 and 29, and July 6, 13, 20 and 27, 1923. It is evident that publication could have been commenced in time to toll the statute; but it is also evident that respondents did not take in an orderly and continuous manner the steps necessary to foreclose the deed of trust, even if we could say that the petition for the appointment of a substitute trustee was a proceeding. As we said in Friel v. Alewel, 318 Mo. 1, 7, 298 S. W. 762: “We are of the opinion that a ‘proceeding under power of sale,’ as used in the statute, means a course of action or procedure, resulting in competent, orderly and continuous steps of procedure until the power of sale has been fully exercised in accordance with the statutes appertaining thereto.” If respondents are to be permitted to wait from May 14, 1923, until June 22, 1923, after the statute had run, to commence publication, there was nothing to preclude them, it appears, from executing the power of sale at any future time.
Our conclusions in the preceding paragraphs also apply to the deed of trust and note for $700 secured by it, dated May 16, 1895, due one year after date, executed by Elise Bredenwischer to Fred Speth.
It will be noted that a motion for a new trial was filed in this cause by parties whose interests were identical with those of Evelyn Dalton. Evelyn Dalton perfected an appeal, and now complains of the identical errors that the other appellants assert occurred in the trial court. By their motion for a new trial, the other appellants competently brought to the attention of the trial court and to our attention matters of error, which we have sustained. The trial court was afforded an opportunity, by the motion for a new trial filed by the other appellants, to rectify mistakes and errors. Thus the filing of a motion for a new trial by Evelyn Dalton would have been futile. It follows that the reason for our interpretation of the statute, that a motion for a new trial must be filed in time to permit matters of exception to be reviewed by an appellate court, fails when
V. As the result of our conclusions, we find that Nora Utz and Edna Niewig have an undivided one-eighth interest each in the land; that defendant Judith Pundmann has an undivided one-fourth interest in the land; and that defendant Evelyn Dalton has an undivided one-half interest in the land; and that the other defendants and the respondents herein have no right, title or interest in said land.
Consequently, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion. Henwood and Cooley, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion of DAVIS, C., in Division Two, is adopted as the opinion of Court en Banc. Ragland, C. J., and Atwood, Gantt and White, JJ., concur; Frank, Henwood and Ellison, JJ., concur in paragraphs 1, 2, 3 and 5, and the result.
